As Mr Mugabe has thrown off their farms some of his nation's
most productive farmers, Tom Brinkworth and his wife Pat have found a labour
force and provided a haven for almost 40 men, women and
children.

Over the past two years Mr Brinkworth has travelled seven times
to Zimbabwe and has sponsored nine families, with another six on the way, to
settle and work his more than 40 farms in the triangle between Kingston,
Naracoorte and Keith in South Australia's fertile South East.

"When I
was a kid everybody wanted to be a farmer," Mr Brinkworth said. "Nowadays
nobody wants to be a farmer."

Mr Brinkworth, 68, was spurred into action
in 2003 when he spotted an advertisement calling for sponsors placed by
former Zimbabwean journalist Jill Lambert, who has since helped more than
200 families settle in Australia.

The humanitarian aspect of the
Brinkworths' actions are not lost on the families they have housed and
employed. '

'They're not our parents but they've really taken the place
of them," says dairy farmer Jan Bronkhorst. Mr Brinkworth said Zimbabwe
property owners normally had dozens of workers.

"The blokes just had
to delegate," he said. "I didn't think they'd be much good."

The
families have made Mr Brinkworth eat his words.

"They've coped remarkably
well," he said. "We almost prefer that they don't know much so that we can
teach them. All they have to be is honest and hard working, and willing to
work."

Lisa and Thomas Niehaus and children Aiden, Connor and Jessica
were the first to be taken under the Brinkworths' wing after they lost their
land.

Mr Niehaus, who had more than 40 employees on his produce and
livestock farm, found the new work tough.

"The first couple of months
here almost killed me," he said. "It was a hell of a wake-up call. We grew
up spoilt."

Mr Niehaus, 40, said it was difficult leaving Zimbabwe. He
feels he is starting life again.

"I'll never be able to own my own
farm. As a farmer here you have to put down a 40 per cent deposit and I'll
never be able to afford it."

Mr Bronkhorst left his father behind to come
to Australia with his wife Bridget and children Kaelee and Justin.

"I
nearly got killed by a heap of guys. They threatened my wife and my kids and
when that happened I said 'That's it, we're out of here'," he said.

"My
daughter Kaelee was with me when I was threatened and I put her through the
window and told her to run home."

The Bronkhorsts' house was surrounded
by a 3m electric security fence and by bars, and Mrs Bronkhorst said it took
months for the family to relax in the sleepy South East.

"Our kids
took a couple of months to go out in the paddocks and feel safe," she
said.

In the
aftermath of reports that South Africa's cabinet had agreed in principle to
bail out Zimbabwe from the IMF and to help with humanitarian aid, many
critics and observers have expressed disappointment at Thabo Mbeki's
unwillingness to demand concessions. They say any money given to Robert
Mugabe would be a free gift because the country is not able to pay it
back.

Ivor Jenkins, director of the Institute for Democratic
Alternatives- South Africa (IDASA), said the best plan for Zimbabwe would be
a retirement plan for Mugabe as he has become a liability for the whole
region. Jenkins believes if a loan is given, South Africa should insist that
Mugabe establish a more open democracy and agree to some specific economic
reforms. Without such concessions, Jenkins believes there would be no
security for South Africa.

Harare, Zimbabwe, 08/07 - A group of 60 Dutch farmers have
taken Zimbabwe to international arbitration after Harare seized their farms
to resettle landless peasants under its controversial land
reforms.

The farmers said they had filed their case with the US-based
International Centre for Settlement of Investment Disputes, an affiliate of
the World Bank.

The group claims the farmers` property was protected
by a Bilateral Investment Promotion and Protection Agreement (Bippa) signed
between the two countries, and should therefore have been spared the
seizure.

The Zimbabwe government seized thousands of farms from white
farmers, who owned the bulk of the country`s arable land, to resettle
land-less blacks.

An official at the Dutch embassy in Harare, Lily
Talapessy, said the farmers were seeking compensation from the government
for the loss of the farms.

"The farmers do not demand more than Zimbabwe
has agreed to compensate, stipulated in the Bippa between Zimbabwe and the
Netherlands," Talapsessy, a first secretary at the Dutch Embassy,
said.

"Where the government has not followed the agreed procedure, the
Dutch farmers claim compensation, mutually agreed and paid in the currency
and into the account of their individual choice," she added.

Some 70
Dutch farmers were affected by Zimbabwe`s land reforms, and lost their
property. The majority grew flowers.

On Friday 5 August I visited Hatcliffe Extension
for the second time since the people had been allowed back to their stands in
the "New Stands" area. 4000 stands have been allocated or reallocated. Many
people are back, but some have not yet come, presumably because they have not
been informed about the reallocation. Some are now too sick, like Mr M.. who is
still in Epworth with relatives. Some have not found the money to transport
their belongings back.

Very few people have been given the 4 asbestos
sheets promised by Minister Muchena & co when they addressed residents 2
weeks ago. Some were promised they would be given the sheets last Monday, but
so far no-one has come back to fulfil that promise. In any case, those asbestos
sheets are narrower than a single bed, and scarcely longer - they cannot make a
house with that! Residents are however very busy putting up their shelters with
whatever they can find, and some are already making solid foundations for
substantial houses. Many are living in bits of plastic and any corrugated iron
etc they managed to salvage and hide before they were chased away - but at least
one young mother is sleeping in the open with her baby, she doesn't even have
plastic. We are asking well-wishers to please now help with plastic sheeting
and building materials if at all possible. It is so tragic that all these
residents had adequate, if flimsy, shelter 3 months ago, and many now cannot
afford to replace even that basic shelter!

The promise of extra lessons to make up the two
months of lost classes has come to nothing - there are no facilities at all for
extra lessons. Many parents have opted to wait until the new term begins in
September rather than wasting more school fees for just 3 or 4 days of lessons
at the end of this term. However it is unclear whether Zambuko Primary School
will reopen. Currently it is being vandalised, with a number of broken window
panes and probably books etc from the classrooms are disappearing, if not
already gone. The corrugated iron roofing on the main hall is being "helped" to
come off.

The biggest shock was the Clinic, near the school,
which has disappeared! It was still standing and unharmed a month ago, and we
were told it would probably re-open, but only the foundations remain. Before
and after photos are available on request.

I am very concerned that so many efforts from
churches, NGO's and individual well-wishers have been destroyed by the regime
and its agents in this Operation Murambatsvina. I know that it will be
extremely difficult to persuade those people and organisations to invest in the
residents of Hatcliffe Extension a second time round, after this deliberate
destruction. They also need major infrastructure investment in terms of
boreholes and/or upgrading of the Municipality infrastructure to be able to cope
with their water and sewerage requirements, etc - it is not clear what help, if
anything, they will get at that level.

Meanwhile, it is still very cold at night, and many
residents have lost their property one way or another in the various upheavals,
so we appeal yet again for whatever you may be able to give to assist -
especially building materials and plastic sheeting. Also warm clothes,
blankets, children's clothes, and dry foods esp. mealie meal. Donations can be
dropped directly at New Stands (opposite SIRDC and further down the hill near
the contractors' site) or at St Augustine's Catholic Church in Hatcliffe One
(access from Scam Way off the Borrowdale Rd before Domboshawa) or small amounts
at my Parliamentary office in Mt Pleasant Hall (leave with caretaker Mr
Gwarada), my home at 4 Ashbrittle Crescent, Emerald Hill or at Our Lady of the
Wayside Mt Pleasant (crnr The Chase/Pendennis Rd) or St Gerards in Borrowdale.
Every donation goes to very deserving people, and we are very grateful for
everything, however small!

ABOUT 300 hectares of crops worth
billions of dollars belonging to Zimbabwe's ambassador to China, Chris
Mutsvangwa, and the director of State Occasions Anne Knuth, were reportedly
destroyed by a disgruntled former commercial farmer, only identified as
Nickleson.The two government officials were last year allocated Nickleson's
Chingford Farm, part of the vast Burgandy Estate in the prime farming zone
of Chegutu.Nickleson allegedly resorted to sabotage tactics in a vain bid to
derail operations on the farm.Knuth and Mutsvangwa have since sought the
intervention of Mashonaland West provincial governor Nelson Samkange,
alleging that immense graft had crept into Chegutu district. A clique of
remaining white farmers are apparently working in cahoots with politicians
to remain on a number of farms. Documents at hand allege that Nickleson was
allowed to wind up his operations at the farm but became hostile and
reportedly set his cattle to graze on 15 hectares of seed maize crop in
January.A further 70 hectares of seed maize and 45 hectares of seed sugar
beans is said to have wilted after Nickleson's farm manager, a Bolton,
allegedly removed irrigation equipment from the plots.Another 45
hectares of sugar beans were razed after Thornhurst Investments, a company
contracted by the Jewel Bank to assemble irrigation equipment at the farm,
delayed the job.Bolton allegedly removed electricity circuit breakers a
night before Thornhurst finally delivered."In April, 150 hectares of
land had been prepared for the winter wheat. "However, six irrigation pumps
and engines were removed, all to sabotage and throttle our winter planting
programme."It is surprising that whilst we are going through all this naked
sabotage and hustles with Nickleson/Bolton, while these reports have reached
the ears of all top government officials and authorities in Chegutu, none of
the officials have dared to correct this inconvenience."This leaves us
with no hesitation to conclude that they are on the side of the
inconveniencer since some pipes and sprinklers removed from the premises
found their way to the Selous councillor's farm and other officials around
Chegutu," Knuth alleged in a letter to Samkange, dated 24 May 2005.She
confirmed last week that together with Mutsvangwa they had sought the
provincial governor's help, after suspecting underhand dealings were at play
as pleas for assistance from local political and government departments,
including the police, were hitting brick walls. "I don't want to name
people, but I sought the governor's (Samkange) intervention after realising
that it was impossible to farm. They were not forthcoming," Knuth
said."However, after we wrote the letter, Nickleson was asked by the
District Administrator (DA) for Chegutu to bring back the pumps."The
letter was also copied to the DA and other government officials.Samkange
yesterday said the dispute could have been dealt with at a lower level, but
he quickly pointed out that he was prepared to intervene if the farmers were
still facing problems."If I am appraised of the current state of the
situation, I will be quite happy to resolve it," he said.The
officer-in-charge of Selous Police Station confirmed receiving complaints
from

Knuth and Mutsvangwa but referred questions to the police
provincial headquarters in Chinhoyi."We have received the complaints,
but we are not allowed to speak to the press. Talk to the provincial public
relations officer in Chinhoyi," he said adding that four reports were
received.Efforts to get comment from Nickleson were fruitless at the time of
going to press yesterday.The Daily Mirror investigations last week
revealed that graft had reached alarming levels in Chegutu
district.Information at hand shows that about 20 white commercial farmers
have assumed immense influence to dictate things after allegedly pumping out
millions in this year's parliamentary polls to prop up chances of prominent
local politicians in return for protection against compulsory acquisitions
of their properties.

THE Combined Harare Residents Association (CHRA) has
described as unacceptable delays in setting down their urgent application to
the High Court challenging the continuous stay in office of the commission
led by Sekesai Makwavarara.The commission was appointed in December last
year.CHRA's legal committee chairperson and MDC MP for Harare North Trudy
Stevenson, said they filed the urgent application to safeguard residents'
right to be represented by democratically elected councillors."CHRA
applied for an urgent hearing of this matter in order to avoid prejudice to
residents in terms of rates and charges payments and prevention of their
right to be represented by democratically-elected councillors," Stevenson
said."Our urgent chamber application has still not been heard nearly two
months later and this is unacceptable," she added.She said residents
were now being forced to pay huge increases in rates and service charges
despite numerous objections made to the Commission administering the
capital.CHRA applied for an urgent hearing of the matter to avoid
prejudicing residents in terms of rates and charges payments and snapping of
their right to be represented by office bearers of their choice."Our
urgent chamber application has still not been heard nearly two months later
and this is unacceptable," Stevenson charged.She went on: "Residents are
being forced to pay huge increases in their rates and charges, despite
numerous objections that were lodged with the Municipality. The Makwavarara
Commission has failed to respond to these objections in clear contravention
of the law." CHRA filed the urgent High Court application challenging the
continued stay in office of the Commission on June 7. But the Minister of
Local Government, Public Works and Urban Development Ignatius Chombo
extended its mandate by a further six months on June 9.The Zimbabwe
Electoral Commission (ZEC) chairperson, Justice George Chiweshe, the
commission running the affairs of Harare and Chombo have been cited as
respondents in CHRA's urgent application."CHRA is concerned at the
judiciary's delay in setting down our challenge to the extension of the
Harare Commission beyond the 6-month term provided by the Urban Councils Act
and confirmed by the Supreme Court in the case of Stevenson Vs Chombo,
Chanakira Commission et al. in 2001" Stevenson said.The residents' lawyers,
the Zimbabwe Lawyers for Human Rights (ZLHR), have also written to Judge
President (JP) Paddington Garwe over delays in hearing the matter.In a
letter dated July, residents' lawyer Rangu Nyamurundira said: "On 7th June
we lodged an urgent chamber application on behalf of CHRA arising from
violations of the electoral laws and Urban Councils Act asking this
honourable court to urgently rectify the situation. It was served on all
parties the same day and was allocated to the Honourable Mrs Justice
Makoni.Despite the initial certificate of urgency and a number of enquiries,
no action has been taken and nothing has been heard from the learned
Judge."The JP is yet to respond to the residents' concerns.

Recent developments and murmurings locally and internationally
might indicate that Zimbabwe, on the verge of an economic collapse, could
soon re-engage the international community in order to creep out of its
crisis.

The Zimbabwean Ambassador to the New York-based United Nations,
indicating Harare's dramatic shift from its anti-western rhetoric, has
called on the International Monetary Fund (IMF), the World Bank (WB) and
other donor agencies to move in and find how best they can help solve
Zimbabwe's economic crisis in order to avert collapse.

The call comes
in the wake of what appears to be positive engagement between Zimbabwe,
South Africa, China and the United Nations, among other nations and
international bodies.

The South African government, according to media
reports, has already okayed a US$500 million loan to Zimbabwe, while the UN
secretary-general, Kofi Annan, is expected in Zimbabwe in the near future on
a mission that insiders at the world body say would focus on how best to
mobilise humanitarian support for Harare.

South African government
spokesman Joel Netshitenzhe has said monetary aid to Zimbabwe would be
"within the context of their (Zimbabwe's) programme of economic recovery".
On the other hand, China is increasingly showing willingness to forge out
business deals with Zimbabwe, when the country's traditional partners in the
European Union and the United States of America (USA) have sharply reduced
trade volumes or completely withdrawn. Boniface Chidyausiku, Zimbabwe's
ambassador to the UN, said it would also be in the best interest of southern
African countries to help their neighbour because developments in Zimbabwe
have a direct impact on them as well.

"Zimbabwe has one of the best
infrastructures on the (African) continent and it would be sad for them (the
IMF and other donors) to let it go to waste for political reasons. "If
people in Washington (at IMF) are willing to help, we are not asking for too
much. All we are saying is that they should resume balance of payments in
order for our foreign currency reserves to improve, so that we can be able
to adequately fund agriculture and industry," Chidyausiku told the Sunday
Mirror.

He said it was a "miracle" that the Zimbabwean economy had not
collapsed following the withdrawal of financial aid by the IMF and WB from
seven years ago. "Most developing countries have their budgets largely
donor-funded, with some of them receiving as much as 90 percent of aid. But,
as experience has taught us, there is no free money and those who assist
always aim to reap political capital," he added.

From the turn of the
century, Zimbabwe has been burdened by dwindling foreign currency supplies
which have impacted negatively on macro-economic
activities.

Currently, the country is having problems in sourcing
fuel from outside, a situation that has hit hard, not only the transport
sector, but also other industries that depend on fuel and forex. Basic goods
are in short supply and there is a thriving oil and commodities black
market, while inflation, which had been on a downward trend from the
beginning of last year, is now perched at 164 percent and might shoot upward
of 300 percent by year-end.

In spite of these problems, there is optimism
in some circles that if the government heeds advice, there could be a real
turnaround in the fortunes of the country.

It is expected that the
windfall that Pretoria has extended to Zimbabwe could be used to largely
settle the country's debt with the IMF, which by June stood at US$295
million, following which negotiations between the government and the
international financial institution would take place for the country to be
re-instated as a full member.

In a statement in June the IMF external
relations, following a visit by the body's team to Harare, said the move to
defer deliberations was meant to provide for "the country (Zimbabwe) with
another chance to strengthen cooperation with the Fund in terms of policies
and payments". ""A rebuilding of relations with the international community
is a critical part of the effort to reverse the economic decline. We hope
the authorities will work more closely with us to formulate and implement
such a policy package, which would help stabilise the economy and improve
the welfare of the Zimbabwean people," stated the IMF. The IMF intends for
Harare to come up with a "comprehensive policy package" that would lower the
fiscal deficit being experienced and the establishment of a "unified
market-determined exchange rate" as well as structural reforms to ease
bureaucracy and restore investor confidence.

There are calls for the
government to use the loan from South Africa to ensure long-term solutions
to its problems rather than merely plough it into consumptive
programmes.

South Africa last week availed the loan, half of what
Zimbabwe had reportedly asked for, saying the collapse of Zimbabwe's economy
would have a destabilising effect on Pretoria. A senior official at the UN,
speaking off the record, told the Sunday Mirror that the resumption of
balance of payments to Zimbabwe by the IMF would help restore investor
confidence and boost the economy.

"Engagement between Zimbabwe, the
IMF and other donors would help improve macro-economic dynamics. As it were,
the perception of (Zimbabwe as) a country in conflict, whether justified or
not, has taken root and once the IMF comes in again, there could be renewed
investor confidence," said the UN official.

He said even though a
date has not been set, Annan "would be too happy to undertake a visit to
Zimbabwe and see how best he can help".

The UN secretary-general was
recently invited to Zimbabwe by President Robert Mugabe to assess for
himself the situation on the ground following a controversial clean-up
operation that led to a special envoy, Anna Tibaijuka, being dispatched to
the country on a fact-finding mission.

She produced a report that damned
the government for causing suffering to about 700 000 Zimbabweans when their
homes and informal markets were destroyed.

The UN source said Annan
would be coming principally to address humanitarian concerns.

"The
Secretary-General will soon visit Zimbabwe basically to engage the
government and other stakeholders on how best to mobilise food aid in the
wake of the drought that affected the country and to see how people who were
affected by the clean-up operation might be helped.

"He will assess
how Zimbabwe sees the prospects of dialoguing with the international and
donor communities, after which he would encourage those that can help to
chip in because he would be better equipped by his visit," he
said.

He added that Annan would not be coming as a mediator between the
ruling Zanu PF and the Movement for Democratic Change (MDC), in the wake of
renewed local and international calls for dialogue between the two political
parties, but said the secretary-general would also talk to the main
opposition and civil society.

Said the source: "Mr Annan is in
constant touch with all UN agencies and programmes to impress on them the
need to mobilise support for Zimbabwe, and I am aware that there has been a
flash appeal to raise US$31 million for humanitarian aid." "Depending on the
discussions, Mr Annan would also want to talk about the political
environment in Zimbabwe and advise on how best the country can shed off the
tag of intolerance and address certain controversial laws, but that would
only be done bearing in mind that Zimbabwe is a sovereign country." He said
even though Annan had commissioned Tibaijuka to write a report based on her
observations, his visit was still relevant because the secretary-general
might not necessarily agree with the contents of his envoy's
report.

The African diplomat added however that the government should
seriously consider the recommendation for developmental co-operation with UN
agencies in order to mitigate the effects of drought.

There has been
an outcry in the past when the government virtually banned humanitarian food
donors to avail aid to hungry Zimbabweans, accusing them of harbouring
political agendas. Some observers have been speculating that, in spite of a
bona fide desire in South Africa to help the country out of its mess, there
could have been behind-the-scenes manouvres between President Thabo Mbeki
and the IMF to rescue Zimbabwe.

They also say China might have encouraged
Zimbabwe to shed its defensive attitude against perceived political enemies
in the EU and the US and work towards progressive dialogue with
them.

China itself had lived in near-isolation for decades before
bringing down its own "Iron Curtain" in the early nineties, opening up its
economy to the world and setting the tone for its current economic bloom.
Even though the IMF pulled out in 1998, accusing Zimbabwe of fiscal
indiscipline, the monetary institution has never shown any urgency to
completely expel the country from its ranks.

In February, the IMF
extended by six months deliberations on the compulsory ejection of Zimbabwe.
The timing of the loan from South Africa is seen as a deliberate way of
making sure that Harare rises from the depths.

Chidyausiku admits that
Zimbabwe has made political and economic gaffes in the past, but hastens to
add that institutions like the IMF should also shoulder the
blame.

Analysts say the attitude of the IMF, whose policies a former WB
chief economist, Joseph Stiglitz, once likened to "high-altitude bombing"
stems from an unacknowledged admission that it has also played a part in
Zimbabwe's economic crisis.

The IMF in the 1990s pressured the
government to adopt a structural adjustment programme that proved to be
disastrous and offset a debilitating economic downturn.

The economic
structural adjustment programme (ESAP), which was premised on the almost
unhindered liberalisation of the economy, crippled industry and led to
massive job losses and flight of capital.

Analysts say there should have
been a quid pro quo between economic liberalisation by Zimbabwe on one hand
and balance of payment support by the IMF. The government has been arguing
that it had been playing its part, while the IMF in 1998 refused to provide
balance of payment support, arguing from 1995, that while Zimbabwe had been
heeding its directions, not enough was being done. The failure to provide
balance of payment support, at a time when Zimbabwe had liberalised to the
extent of massive capital flight by a footloose section of the population,
proved almost economically fatal, from the late nineties to the present.

Lovemore Masawi, spokesman for Zimbabwe`s earthquake
monitoring agency, Goetz Observatory, said there were no reports of damage
after the tremor, which struck in the middle of the night, and had its
epicentre along the Zambezi River, the border line between Zimbabwe and
Zambia.

He said the resort towns of Victoria Falls in Zimbabwe, and
Livingstone in Zambia, felt the quake, but no damage was
reported.

"There was a tremor at 0231 hours and 28 seconds. The epicentre
of the earthquake was 18.11 south on the latitude and 26.27 east on the
longitude. Its magnitude was 3.6 as measured on the Richter Scale," Masawi
said.

According to him, this was on fault lines along the Zambezi River,
which has experienced several earthquakes in the last six
years.

"Generally, the possibility in this area is very high because of
some faults," he explained.

The least of the former
Zimbabwean Information minister's crimes is blinding hypocrisy, writes
Justice Malala

He is a vile, evil, two-faced, dissembling co-conspirator
to torture, starvation and murder

MEMORIES of injustice persist. They
cannot be erased, they cannot be subju gated. They rise.

I, for
example, cannot forget Gugu Moyo. No one who meets her would. Frail,
serious, the young lawyer used her devastating intellect and stamina to help
launch and drive an international campaign to save the Daily News in
Zimbabwe.

Two years ago she travelled to South Africa, Namibia,
Botswana, the UK and the US to ask govern ments and civil organisations to
help save the newspaper after it was shut down by the government of
Zimbabwe. She failed.

Moyo is not the only one I cannot forget. I cannot
forget the young journalists at SW Radio Africa, forced to broadcast from
London because they would be jailed in their own country. I also cannot
forget Wilf Mbanga and John Masuku, journalists who have fled the same
persecution in Zimbabwe.

I cannot forget the despairing faces of the
hundreds of activists - many with devastating stories of torture - I have
met in New York, Hillbrow, London, Pretoria and Amsterdam. All of them fled
the torture and death that Jona than Moyo - as Robert Mugabe's Information
minister - gleefully orchestrated, ruthlessly carried out and defended with
a frightening robustness in public.

These memories - and those of
millions of Zimbabweans and others across the world - are alive.

At a
time when so many get away with murder, memory remains the most powerful
weapon against a repeat of the corruption, dishonesty, cant and murder that
is visited upon our fellow human beings in places like Zimbabwe. In fact, it
is the only weapon we have.

Dictators and their cohorts thrive on the
rewriting of history and the erasure of memory.

Jonathan Moyo writes
in last week's Sunday Times, "Mugabe has dug Zanu-PF's grave", as though he
were not complicit in the wave of torture, repression and murder that has
engulfed that country in the past seven years.

With breathtaking
hypocrisy, he calls Mugabe a "rhetorical nationalist who does not want to
see democracy anywhere near him".

For years Moyo was the main driver of
Mugabe's attempts to throttle the legitimate voices of the Zimbabwean people
- and now he wants us to forget his role in all this?

Nothing can
erase from our collective memory what Moyo has done and the numerous deaths
he has to be accused of causing.

We must also not forget that Moyo is not
where he is today because he decided to stand up against Mugabe's excesses.
Moyo and some of his cohorts within Zanu-PF were plotting to block a Mugabe
favourite from taking over the party leadership and thereby hopefully
succeeding the ageing and demented dictator.

Moyo and his friends
wanted themselves to sup at the table that Mugabe is luxuriating at while
Zimbabweans starve.

Let us remember
the Daily News, once Zimbabwe's biggest-selling newspaper.

The Media
Monitoring Project of Zimbabwe (MMPZ) points out that when legal steps to
close the paper in 2000 failed, Moyo - then getting into his stride as
Mugabe's apologist - began "extra-legal" steps to shut it down.

"In April
2000 its head office was bombed. In January 2001, its printing press was
bombed in a military-style operation. Hours before this attack, the
Information minister [Moyo] had told the government-controlled broadcaster
that the state would silence the Daily News, saying it posed a security risk
to the nation," the MMPZ wrote.

Moyo went on to introduce one of the most
undemocratic pieces of legislation ever passed through an African
parliament, the Access to Information and Privacy Act. After its adoption,
foreign journalists were kicked out of Zimbabwe, more newspapers shut down
and hundreds of journalists forced into exile or jail.

When Moyo
brought the legislation to parliament even his Zanu-PF colleagues thought he
was bonkers. The chairman of the Parliamentary Legal Committee, Dr Eddison
Zvobgo, said: "I can say without equivocation that this Bill, in its
original form, was the most calculated and determined assault on our
liberties guaranteed by the Constitution, in the 20 years I served as
Cabinet minister."

Moyo cannot fool us, must not fool us. He is a
principal player in the conspiracy that has brought Zimbabwe to its knees,
and he is a principal player in and accessory to the harassment, torture and
murder that has become the signature of Robert Mugabe.

He is to
Mugabe what Goebbels was to Hitler. While Mugabe killed, Moyo lied,
whitewashed and turned the screws on independent media. Through his columns
in The Herald he exhorted Zanu-PF's militias to harass and where possible
eliminate the opposition. He is a vile, evil, two-faced, dissembling
co-conspirator to torture, starvation of the poor and murder.

All
this we have not forgotten. These memories must stay with us for the day the
International Court of Human Rights rolls into Harare, Bulawayo and Mutare
and we must take the stand and testify.

And Moyo, no matter how much
whitewashing of the past he attempts, will be in the dock.